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Tag: dystopian

‘The Wanderer and the New West’ on Best of the Year list

So, here’s a great way to close out the year. The Wanderer and the New West has been named to Kirkus ReviewsBest Books of 2018!

The cover for The Wanderer and the New West

The honor follows Kirkus Reviews listing The Wanderer and the New West as one of its best indie books of April. The magazine also gave my Dystopian Western novel a starred review back in February.

“A dystopian novel about an America ruled by gangs and gun manufacturers and about the brave few who are willing to fight them both … A tight, thoughtful work that has much to offer readers on both sides of the gun control debate.”

KIRKUS REVIEWS (Starred)

The recognition follows two separate indie awards for The Wanderer and the New West, including a gold medal (Fiction – Dystopia) in the 2018 Readers’ Favorite Awards and Best Western Fiction in the 2018 National Indie Excellence Awards.

Learn more about the award-winning novel at WhoIsTheWanderer.com. Buy the novel at Amazon, Barnes & Noble and other popular online retailers.

Enter by midnight Friday (12/21) to win a paperback edition at Goodreads!

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The Wanderer Wins Gold for Dystopia Fiction in Miami

Welcome to Miami!

It was a few months ago that I learned that I had won a Readers’ Favorite gold medal for my novel The Wanderer and the New West in the Dystopia Fiction category. But I don’t know if it really clicked until I got to the award ceremony in Miami and this happened…

Ego trip aside, it was really great to meet so many other cool indie authors who won awards. We talked about our books, compared notes on marketing tricks, and generally had a good time. We learned from other creators like R.J. Tolson and Eddie Price, as well as media expert Burke Allen and legendary literary agent Frank Weimann.

Readers’ Favorite displayed our novels at the Miami Book Fair, with money from the sales going to St. Jude’s Hospital. Here are some pictures from the booth…

Incidentally, you should really check out the Miami Book Fair next year! I had a really good time perusing the abundance of books on display, and seeing White House reporter April Ryan talk about what it’s like to cover President Trump (whew)! Miami itself is a fun city with a great beach, vibrant culture and exceptional Latin food and drinks.

Oh, and it sure was nice to soak in some sun in the middle of November. It was snowing back home in Philly! Right now outside my window, it’s a gray morning… wouldn’t mind a return to the Sunshine State soon!

When can I go back?

Learn more about The Wanderer and the New West at www.whoisthewanderer.com

Get the book in digital or paperback at Amazon and wherever else books are sold online!

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Great books for considering our strange western society

Authors read books? Why, yes! Here are a few good ones that raise some compelling questions about our society, with one that usefully explains how it got that way!

The Homesman

The Homesman by Glendon Swarthout

Swarthout is great at breaking Western genre tropes with his novels, and he doesn’t disappoint in The Homesman. Here, we learn of an untold history about the psychological costs of living on the frontier. Wolves, cold and disease take a toll on families out there. When a few wives go insane from the pressure, no one wants to take them back home to their families — except a tenacious woman named Mary Bee Cuddy. Delving into prejudice against the mentally ill, the novel moves quickly with colorful characters who stick with you long after the last page. If you like this, make sure you check out Swarthout’s The Shootist and other westerns on my list of favorites that inspired my novel, The Wanderer and the New West.

Philip K. Dick's Electric Dreams

Philip K. Dick’s Electric Dreams by Philip K. Dick

A great entry into the work of Philip K. Dick, this book collects short stories adapted for the TV show of the same name. I haven’t watched the show, but found this to be a fun group of stories with compelling sci-fi ideas. As with any short-story collection, some tales are stronger than others, but all will leave one pondering the weird ways of society. The brevity of these stories forces Dick to get quickly to the point — and should be satisfying for those who struggle to find long periods of time to read. A couple of my favorites included “Exhibit Piece,” in which a future historian decides he prefers to live in the past, and “The Hanging Stranger,” a body-snatchers type tale in which no one in a town seems to be at all worried about a dead man hanging from a light pole. Dick’s work is definitely an influence on my novels, especially We, The Watched and Divided We Fall.

American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North America

American Nations: A History of the Eleven Rival Regional Cultures of North America by Colin Woodard

If you’ve ever wondered how America got that way, this is the history book for you. Woodard challenges the notion that we’re just a bunch of blue and red states. Rather, he theorizes that distinct cultures and histories in eleven regional nations of America explain why swing states go red in certain elections but blue in others, among other intriguing insights. I’m not always excited to read a history book, but this one felt very relevant to today’s political situation. I’m sure to refer back to it in my own news reporting and fictional writing about this land we call the United States.

Roughneck

Roughneck by Jeff Lemire

Enough America! Let’s talk about Canada. Roughneck is another masterpiece graphic novel by Jeff Lemire. Beautiful, expressive artwork matched with another haunting story. Reading Lemire’s books is like watching a great indie film. I also really like the Canadian framing of the story — a washed up hockey player, a run-down Canadian town, trapping and an indigenous history create a great atmosphere. Don’t miss it!

View all my reviews on Goodreads and let me know in the comments if you have any recommendations.

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Striking Gold in the New West

When I finish writing something and put it out in the world, it’s often hard for me to conceptualize that people are actually reading it. It’s the same as an author and in my day job as a journalist. The work goes out into this kind of infinite void, and then it’s on to the next project.

Before gold sticker. Credit: Reedsy

So, you might say it’s pretty humbling to learn that not only are people reading my prose, but they actually like it enough to place a gold sticker on the cover!

Last weekend, The Wanderer and the New West won the gold medal for Dystopian fiction in the 2018 Readers’ Favorite Awards. It’s actually the second award for the Wanderer, who earlier this year snared best Western in the National Indie Excellence Awards.

Readers’ Favorite will officially hand out gold medals this November at the Miami Book Fair. I’m planning to attend, and will have a few paperback copies available to purchase at the show. I’m also planning to bring some gift codes for the Kindle edition, so please ask me for one if you see me at the fair!

Click here for more info about The Wanderer and the New West. Get the EPUB edition for 33% off at Smashwords from now until Dec. 1, 2018 with the coupon code KA58Y.

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The Wanderer visits the library…

Maybe you wouldn’t expect to find a couple of gunslingers holed out in a library. However, in a town taken over by the Red Stripe Gang, the library might just be the best place to plot one’s next moves.

The “library scene” from The Wanderer and the New West

That’s a scene from my dystopian western novel, The Wanderer and the New West. You can read a piece of it in the picture above.

I’ve always loved libraries, that temple-like space where one can find a new book and–gasp–take it home for free! Growing up in Bucks County, PA, my favorite section was the 741s. I assume you’re up on your Dewey Decimal System? See, that’s where they kept all the comic book collections, including ancient tomes like Superman: From the ’30s to the ’70s (for the record, I read this in the late ’90s).

That’s why it’s so awesome to see my novel popping up in various libraries across the country. It’s thanks to the great Kirkus review (a favorite mag among librarians), my book’s distribution on library platforms like Overdrive, and most recently, an appearance at the 2018 American Library Association conference in New Orleans, courtesy of Booklife by Publishers Weekly.

The Wanderer and the New West at the 2018 American Library Association conference in New Orleans.
The Wanderer and the New West featured at the 2018 American Library Association conference in New Orleans, courtesy of Booklife.

As an indie author trying to get noticed, my hope is that readers will find my novels in libraries (eBook and print!) and give ’em a try. If they love one of my books, maybe they’ll recommend it to a friend! Sales are great, but I’d much rather know that more readers are getting a chance to enjoy the words I’ve written.

If you can’t find my novels in your library, please request them! You can refer librarians to this post or the official page for The Wanderer and the New West if they need more information. Please let me know in the comments below if you found my books in yours!

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Adam Bender | adambenderwrites.com | watchadam.blog